US Interior Department Adopts Political Screening Process for Grants

The new policy affects academic and nonprofit grants and cooperative agreements exceeding $50,000.

Written byKatarina Zimmer
| 2 min read

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FLICKR, TOM LOHDANThe US Interior Department has decided to put certain grant awards through a political review process intended to ensure that they are in line with the priorities of President Donald Trump's administration, according to a December 28 directive obtained by The Washington Post.

According to the memo, authored by Scott Cameron, the Interior’s principal deputy assistant secretary for policy, management, and budget, grant awards of $50,000 or more to institutes of higher education or nonprofit organizations “that can legally engage in advocacy,” will need to be submitted to one of his aides for review.

The directive comes with an attachment detailing Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s “top ten priorities,” intended to guide decisions on grant awards. The list includes “utilizing our natural resources,” “protecting our people and the border,” and “ensuring sovereignty means something.”

Heather Swift, a spokesperson for the Interior, tells The Washington Post in an email statement that the department had been undertaking a review process for grants over $100,000 since April 2017. “The new guidance continued ...

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  • katya katarina zimmer

    After a year teaching an algorithm to differentiate between the echolocation calls of different bat species, Katarina decided she was simply too greedy to focus on one field of science and wanted to write about all of them. Following an internship with The Scientist in 2017, she’s been happily freelancing for a number of publications, covering everything from climate change to oncology. Katarina is a news correspondent for The Scientist and contributes occasional features to the magazine. Find her on Twitter @katarinazimmer and read her work on her website.

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